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Nicotine Use in Schizophrenia: a part of the cure or the disease?Berg, Sarah A. 16 March 2012 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / Nicotine use among individuals with schizophrenia occurs at extremely high rates. The prevailing theory is that individuals with schizophrenia smoke as a form of self-medication to ameliorate sensory and cognitive deficits. However, these individuals also have enhanced rates of addiction to several drugs of abuse and may therefore smoke as a result of enhanced addiction liability. The experiments described herein explored these two hypotheses by assessing the effect that nicotine has on working memory, addiction vulnerability (locomotor sensitization and self-administration), and nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) expression as well as the developmental expression of these characteristics in the neonatal ventral hippocampal (NVHL) neurodevelopmental animal model of schizophrenia. The results from these studies indicate that NVHLs had working memory impairments in both adolescence and adulthood, with nicotine having a negligible effect. Additionally, NVHLs displayed enhanced locomotor sensitization to nicotine which emerged in adulthood as well as an enhanced acquisition of nicotine self-administration, administering more nicotine overall. These behavioral differences cannot be attributed to nAChR expression as nicotine upregulated nAChR to a similar extent between NVHL and SHAM control animals. These data indicate that the enhanced rates of nicotine use among individuals with schizophrenia may occur as a result of an enhanced vulnerability to nicotine addiction.
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